Tag Archives: manga

Multi-National Manga Anti-Piracy Coalition Formed

Official Press Release

Media Release — Today a coalition of Japanese and U.S. publishers announced a coordinated effort to combat a rampant and growing problem of internet piracy plaguing the manga industry. “Scanlation,” as this form of piracy has come to be known, refers to the unauthorized digital scanning and translation of manga material that is subsequently posted to the internet without the consent of copyright holders or their licensees. According to the coalition, the problem has reached a point where “scanlation aggregator” sites now host thousands of pirated titles, earning ad revenue and/or membership dues at creators’ expense while simultaneously undermining foreign licensing opportunities and unlawfully cannibalizing legitimate sales. Worse still, this pirated material is already making its way to smartphones and other wireless devices, like the iPhone and iPad, through apps that exist solely to link to and republish the content of scanlation sites.

Participants in the coalition include the 36 members of Japan’s Digital Comic Association, Square Enix, VIZ Media, TOKYOPOP, Vertical, Inc., the Tuttle-Mori Agency and Yen Press. Working together, the membership of the coalition will actively seek legal remedies to this intellectual property theft against those sites that fail to voluntarily cease their illegal appropriation of this material.

“It is unfortunate that this action has become necessary,” said a spokesperson for the group. “However, to protect the intellectual property rights of our creators and the overall health of our industry, we are left with no other alternative but to take aggressive action. It is our sincere hope that offending sites will take it upon themselves to immediately cease their activities. Where this is not the case, however, we will seek injunctive relief and statutory damages. We will also report offending sites to federal authorities, including the anti-piracy units of the Justice Department, local law enforcement agencies and FBI.”

The coalition stated that it has currently identified thirty sites targeted for action.

Participant members of the Digital Comic Association include: Akane Shinsha, Akita Shoten, ASCII Media Works, East Press, Ichijinsha, Enterbrain, Okura Shuppan, Ohzora Shuppan, Gakken, Kadokawa Shoten, Gentosha Comics, Kodansha, Jitsugyo No Nihonsha, Shueisha, Junet, Shogakukan, Shogakukan Shueisha Production, Shodensha, Shonen Gahosha, Shinshokan, Shinchosa, Take Shobo, Tatsumi Shuppan, Tokuma Shoten, Nihon Bungeisha, Hakusensha, Fujimi Shobo, Fusosha, Futabasha, France Shoin, Bunkasha, Houbunsha, Magazine House, Media Factory, Leed sha, Libre Shuppan.

See-Ya to DC’s CMX


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Effective July 1st DC will be shutting down it’s manga imprint CMX.  The company will stop publishing all CMX titles other than Megatokyo, its OEL title, which will continue under the DC Comics imprint.  It’s unclear what will happen to publishing rights to these series as DC has stated “no comment” when asked about that.

In a statement on the shutdown, DC Co-publishers Dan Didio and Jim Lee said

Over the course of the last six years, CMX has brought a diverse list of titles to America and we value the books and creators that we helped introduce to a new audience. Given the challenges that manga is facing in the American marketplace, we have decided that CMX will cease publishing new titles as of July 1, 2010.

This is another setback for DC’s imprints.  It’s female focused Minx unit was closed in 2008.

The company provided a list of CMX’s June titles, the final releases from the company:

May 26 ship, 6/23 in store

Musashi #9 Vol 17

Venus Capriccio Vol 4

Two Flowers for the Dragon Vol 6

Polyphonica: Cardinal Crimson Vol 1

June 2 ship, 6/30 in store

Stolen Hearts Vol 2

Teru Teru X Shonen Vol 7

Orfina Vol 8

Viz Media, a company solely focused on manga reduced their workforce by 40% which goes to show the market has been brutal for that sector of the industry.

Green Comics – Manga Farming


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File this one under different.  As posted at PinkTenticle, Tokyo based artist Koshi Kawachi recently demonstrated his “Manga Farming” technique.  The artist is using old manga as a growing medium for vegetables.  If you’re in Japan you can see the technique at the Matsuzakaya department store in Nagoya where an installation of radish sprouts is on display.

Manga Farming

Tokyo To Restrict And Ban Sexual Comic Books


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Here’s news we didn’t expect to ever hear.  On Friday, the Tokyo city council is meeting and will vote on a new law that will force manga and anime publishers not to sell works in the city’s provinces depicting sexual situations involving minors while restricting the access of minors to work that depicts “harmful materials” or “noxious publications” – rape and other violence. The law has been supported by radical mayor Shintaro Ishihara.  A rather amazing turn of events in a society that’s stereotype is they are tolerant of such material.

It wasn’t too long ago that here in the United States Christoipher Handley of Iowa pleaded guilty of possession of  “obscene” manga as part of a plea bargain.  He was sentended to six months jail for purchasing a small number of such comics.

Numerous of manga creators have protested this piece of legislation of which the Anime News Network is keeping a list.

Attorney Eric Chase Speaks


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Attorney Eric Chase advised Christopher Handley in his case involving the receipt and possession of obscene manga.  Chase released the statement below about the case.  I encourage everyone to read it.

March 2, 2010
Los Angeles, California

On February 11, 2010, Christopher Handley was sentenced in Iowa for possession of Manga books and magazines.  The prosecution, which began in 2006, was based on the notion that the cartoon images were obscene.  My name is Eric Chase, and I am Chris Handley’s attorney.  I have been reading some of the comments about Chris’ case and have noted some considerable confusion about the process that Chris went through as well as the state of obscenity law in the United States.  In the hope that it will help others avoid Chris’ situation and aid the understanding of those outraged by the outcome, I feel it appropriate to now explain the case from our perspective.

Of all the comments I have come across, perhaps the most interesting to me was one made shortly after Chris entered his guilty plea.  It was a criticism of a statement I made in a Wired magazine interview.  I said, “Obscenity is the only law I’m aware of, if a client shows me a book or magazine or movie, and asks me if this image is illegal, I can’t tell them.” The criticism was, “Lawyers who specialize in obscenity cases… track jury verdicts and can tell you with nearly 100% reliability whether what they’re looking at would be ruled obscene by a jury….”

First, the idea that any lawyer can tell anyone with anything approaching 100% certainty what a jury will decide about anything is just plain silly.  Jurors are people.  As such, any trial lawyer will agree that the only thing predictable about juries is that they are unpredictable.  Second, look at the Max Hardcore case.  He was represented by Louis Sirkin, who is widely regarded as the top obscenity lawyer in the country.  He is the lawyer who won Free Speech Coalition v. Ashcroft in the U.S. Supreme Court.  Max Hardcore was a prolific producer of “cutting edge” pornography that many found disgusting.  For example, it included urination as a form of degradation role-play.  However, it occurred between, was distributed by, and was purchased by consenting adults.  Despite Mr. Sirkin’s exceptional arguments regarding artistic merit, freedom of speech, and community standards, Max Hardcore was convicted by a jury and was sentenced to 46 months in federal prison. (On its initial appeal, the verdict was upheld but it has been remanded for re-sentencing).  In fact, that verdict, which is as ridiculous as the prosecution of Chris Handley, was particularly disheartening as we considered plea offers.

In understanding Chris’ situation, you have to understand the Ashcroft opinion, which has been universally and tragically, at least for Chris, misunderstood.  That case held that sexual images of virtual minors could not be prosecuted as child pornography. However, it did not hold that virtual child pornography was legal.  Rather, it expressly stated that those depictions could be prosecuted as obscenity under the Miller standard.  In short hand, Miller’s three prongs require for conviction a finding that a depiction is 1) sexual in nature (prurient); 2) patently offensive; and 3) lacking in serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value. The first two prongs are judged by community standards and the third by an objective standard.

Chris, like most everyone else who had only heard about Ashcroft from news accounts that shoddily reported that the Supreme Court had “legalized virtual child porn,” believed the magazines were legal when he bought them.  As importantly, Chris was not a collector exclusively of lolicon.  He was a collector of all things manga. Of the thousands of books and magazines found by the Feds at Chris’ home, only about twenty had questionable content and ultimately only seven were charged as clearly depicting the violent sexual abuse of obviously very young children.

What Chris did not know was that in direct response to the Supreme Court’s suggestion in Ashcroft, Congress passed 18 USC 1466A, which criminalized as obscenity a laundry list of virtual depictions, including comics, that portray the sexualization of children.  The big difference between 1466A and the general obscenity statute is that the former carries a 5 year mandatory minimum sentence for the more serious charge of “receipt” (and is cross-referenced in the Federal Sentencing Guidelines to child pornography so it gets the same presumptive sentence as if it were real child porn).  Now, “receipt” is an odd charge that is applicable in nearly every possession case.  Simply, you can’t possess something without first receiving it.  Yet, receipt carries the 5 year mandatory minimum sentence, while possession does not. If the case had gone to trial, the jury would have been prohibited from hearing about the minimum applied to the receipt charge, and thus, would not have considered it in determining which, if any, of the charges to convict him of.  Through its choice to create two crimes with vastly different sentences for the same conduct, Congress gave to the prosecution an invaluable tool (quite similar to extortion) in obtaining pleas.

So, Chris had the following difficult options.  He could defend the images which, when projected on an 8’x8′ screen on a courtroom wall, an Iowa jury certainly, and any jury probably, would have likely agreed they “do not want in their community.” (I note that a ban on “kids having sex” pictures, even when only drawn, appears widely supported even by many otherwise apparently liberal bloggers.)  His second choice was to have the receipt charge and its mandatory minimum dismissed and focus at sentencing on his personal situation, which certainly did not merit serious jail time.  His ultimate sentence was 6 months with a recommendation that his term be served in a halfway house.  Unlike Max Hardcore, who opted for the trial (remember, his prosecution was equally, if not more, offensive to notions of free speech), Chris will likely never have a jail door slam behind him.

I know the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund and others concerned about the defense of comic books specifically, and free speech generally, are upset that the case did not go to trial.  They are right to be.  The Miller obscenity test is vague, indecipherable, and clearly chills protected speech.  Among its most frightening aspects is that its “community standards” element may allow “moral majority” communities to dictate to the rest of us.  The extortionate tool given to prosecutors through the receipt charge, with its mandatory minimum, gives incentive to defendants to not mount appropriate “community standards” or “serious artistic value” challenges.

In defense of Chris Handley, given his choices, I suppose all I can do is ask: What would you have done?

To the CBLDF and other commendable defenders of free speech whom we may need now more then ever, there is some hope on the horizon.  Louis Sirkin and Max Hardcore are currently waging an important battle in their appeal of his conviction on the issue of what the appropriate community is for the Miller test.  The argument, with which some courts have already agreed, is that in an interconnected internet world, you can’t allow the most repressive of “communities” to dictate what is available to everyone else.  There exists a split among Federal Courts of Appeal in different parts of the country that the U.S. Supreme Court is expected to address and resolve.  It may even be that Max’s case is a better platform for the battle than would have been Chris’ in that it does not involve the explosive element of “children” and instead can focus entirely on the fundamental shortcomings of obscenity law in its current state.

However, though it would be great for Max Hardcore, who would get a new trial, a win on the “which community” question will have little practical effect at future jury trials on obscenity.  A Bible belt jury will be “instructed” to apply a national standard instead of their county’s.  So what?  As they always have when asked what they believe community standards should be, they are still going to apply their own personal standards.  This suggests a more fundamental problem with the Miller test.

That problem, which the Supreme Court has contorted to overcome in upholding the Miller test, is vagueness. “Void for Vagueness” is a constitutional doctrine that requires that a criminal law’s proscriptions be ascertainable so that a person is put on notice before he or she acts about whether his or her contemplated action will violate the law.  To the extent that the response to my Wired statement is correct about being able to tell ahead of a trial what a jury will find obscene, it is only correct about the extreme depictions that have, so far, been the focus of prosecutorial attention.  As I have read the reaction to Chris’ plea and sentence, I have seen a questioning of the legality of everything from Nabokov and “American Beauty” to Japanese Yaoi, which depicts figures that are androgynous, hairless, and clearly childlike, but not clearly children.  If you asked me today whether it is legal to sell Yaoi on the Internet knowing that it would be available in Iowa or most anywhere in the south, I am not sure what the answer would be.

I am, however, certain from comments I’ve read that some who have heard about Chris have already destroyed literature that certainly should not be considered illegal.  That “chilling effect” on free speech is precisely the reason for the vagueness doctrine.  So, the question should not just be which community is being polled, but how can we rely on polling at all when such an important right is at stake and the poll results change each time they are taken?

However, the fight for a national standard is the one that has currently been joined.  For now, let us wish Mr. Hardcore and Mr. Sirkin well, and let us also wish well to all those who continue the fight for all of our fundamental liberties.  While we’re at it, let us also wish well to Christopher Handley.

Eric A. Chase, Esq.
United Defense Group, LLP

New Prime Minister Enjoys His Comic Books

With his recent election Japan’s Prime Minister-elect, Taro Aso, is making news across the world.  In his introduction to many of us it is often mentioned in stories covering him that he’s an avid comic book reader.  After being spotted reading a comic book at an airport, the newly elected official rebranded himself as Japan’s nerd-in-chief.  He set up an award for Japanese-style manga comics and held an election rally last year in Akihabara, Tokyo’s subculture hub.

“People feel Aso is like common people,” said Kyoji Yamaguchi, a 31-year-old stage producer in Akihabara. “He reads weekly comic books just like Japanese salarymen.”

I wonder if in his preparation for his new position he’s read the fantastic manga First President of Japan?

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